Thursday, October 31, 2019

Looking back at the summer of 2019 - Paros - Greece

In the last week of July, we went to Greece for a little beach vacation together with Makayla. Knut had not been to Greece before, and I had only visited Athens (during winter), and not the islands, so we were both very excited to see the beaches and eat the delicious Greek food.

On Paros we rented an Airbnb-apartment in the village of Dryos. The apartment was typically Greek; white and blue, and with a beautiful view over the beach and ocean. The days were mainly spent on the beach, with a coffee freddo (sweet Greek iced coffee, perfect for a sweet tooth like me), and a dip in the water once in a while.

In the evenings we tried different restaurants in the area, and tasted some really great local food. The northernmost village Naousa was definitely my favorite on Paros. Such a charming town, with white houses, narrow streets, and small design shops. Even though there were a lot of tourists, I didn't think that stood in the way of getting a good experience in the town. They were obviously used to having a lot of people visiting in July, and made the best out of it.

Enjoying our first evening in Naousa. 

Posing in front of one of many beautiful window frames. 

A local sight of squids drying outside of restaurants.

Hand in hand on Antiparos ♥

The sunset seen from the village Parikia. 


Enjoying the beach and the warm weather.
Enjoying a sweet coffee freddo ♥

One of the many churches on Paros. I love the white
and blue colors together with the pink flowers. 
Knut made a new friend.

Makayla picked fruits from a random garden on Antiparos.

Enjoying some local wine in Naousa on our last evening. 

It was a great adventure together with our favorite Texan, and we can't wait to see you again and explore more random places in the world with you! ♥ 

Looking back at the summer of 2019 - Norway

The summer of 2019 was the first summer we both did not work and got to spend a lot of quality time together. Not only as boyfriend and girlfriend, but one of the first days of vacation, we also got engaged! So we got to spend our summer as newly engaged together in a lot of lovely places and with so many of our family and friends.

Our summer started on the 1st of July, when we moved to Norway from Copenhagen. It was a stressful day, starting with a flight from Copenhagen to Oslo with no less than 10 pieces of luggage. We went to IKEA, and I was not expecting anything, until the evening, Knut asked me to marry him and it was such a pleasant surprise. Our new home was loaded with IKEA-boxes and we had only just starting to put up the furniture, but during the next couple of days, the apartment started to look pretty good.

After a couple of days of furnishing and stressing over IKEA-furniture (it's safe to say I am not a fan of IKEA), we went to an island in the south of Norway, Lyngør, to visit our friends who have a cabin/ summer house there. It was such a lovely trip, and such an idyllic location. The old, white tree houses, the sailboats, the fishing (and also catching) and just the thought of not having to do anything was amazing. The mackerel tasted even better than usual when we caught it ourselves, and the sunny weather did us good.
Knut took some beautiful pictures of Lyngør!
Always happiest at sea.


Fishing at the pier.

And caught one mackerel!
Next in line was the Molde International Jazz Festival, that we go to every year. This year's headlines were amongst others some of my all time favorites; Melody Gardot, Marcus Miller and Gregory Porter. We had a lovely festival experience (as always) with friends and family, and ended the week by celebrating the 50 year anniversary of the Moon landing (on July 20th 1969) with a Moon Party with our friends. The perfect end of a pretty awesome week!
Always a good mood during the jazz festival! 

The guys getting a beer on the roof top Hawaii party. 

Louis Cole and his band were very entertaining
and funky, and gave us a catchy, upbeat show.

The weather was also nice, and we took a swim at Hjertøya. 

Fimke and me at the Moon Party celebrating
the 50th anniversary of the Moon landing. 

The Moon Party. <3 
(Right after the festival, we flew to Athens, for a little vacation on the island Paros, which I will write a separate blog post on.)

As a last little trip before the semester started at the university, we went to our friends' cabin out by the coast of Telemark. Again, we were welcomed with such sweet hospitality in company of good friends, and enjoyed ourselves to the fullest. The days were enjoyed eating good food, playing games, and fishing (but not with the same luck as last time). 
The view from the cabin. So cute and peaceful.


Dinner in good company <3 

All in all a very busy summer even though we did not work. Traveling to the west and east of Norway, to Greece and of course moving our lives from Copenhagen to Ås. We have a lot of good memories to look back at from the summer of 2019, and now that we are almost in November, it is nice to look back at the good, sunny days. 

-A 

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Nordjylland

A couple of weeks before easter, Knut randomly said to me "I really want to go to the north of the country!", and we immediately started planning a trip up north, to beautiful Jylland. We got a lot of good recommendations from our Danish friends, and the sweetest couple in the world, Olivia and Vincent, borrowed us their car, and we were good to go.

Our trip was 4 days long, which is really short for driving back and forth from Copenhagen to Nordjylland, but we had a great trip, and just narrowed down every bit of what we wanted to see and do.

Day one, roadtrip + Skagen: 
The first day was just a long roadtrip from Copenhagen to the northernmost city in Denmark, Skagen. The drive was about 6 hours long, including stops, but it was really nice weather along the way, and the music on the radio kept us in good company.
Right before we arrived in Skagen, and right before the sun was about to set, we stopped at Den Tilsandede Kirke, and Knut shot some beautiful photos of the church in the sunset!
In Skagen, we got dinner at Bodilles Kro, where we got a delicious fish soup and fresh fish from Hirtshals. We stayed at Hotel Petit, a really cute hotel with a sweet and welcoming staff.
Den tilsandede kirke in sunset
 Day 2 and 3, roadtripping down to Aalborg, + Aalborg:
The next day was a monday, and we got up, ate breakfast and went for a walk in the city centre. It was as dead and abandoned as a small town can be on a morning before 10 am, but fortunately, the sun was shining, and the buildings and the harbor area were charming and lovely to look at. After our little walk, we drove to the northernmost point of the Danish mainland, Grenen.

The beach and area Grenen was so beautiful on this sunny day, and the big, white sanded beach gave me associations to the white beach scene in Pirates of the Caribbean.


My favorite travel buddy! Great shot by a German
tourist at Grenen, the tip of Denmark.


Next, we drove west on the Marguerite Route, and stopped in Rubjerg Knude Fyr. Knut had only seen pictures of the lighthouse on Instagram, but really wanted to stop there, and it turned out to be the highlight of the trip. The lighthouse is located down by the ocean, but is no longer active, because it was damaged by all the sand that covered it, and because it is located on moraine, it will most likely sink into the water within the next 3-5 years. The walk from the parking and up to the lighthouse was like walking through a desert, and was something I never thought I would experience in Denmark. A trip to Rubjerg Knude Fyr is absolute worth a visit.

Me trying to lay on the wind at Rubjerg Knude Fyr


Next stop was just a 15 min drive away, the little town Løkken. There we ate a big ice cream, and took a walk on the beach (where surfing was possible, but too cold that day!), and enjoyed the charming city.

Last stop that day was Aalborg, where we were staying for two nights. Thanks to my good friend Nanna, we hade more than enough to do in Aalborg, since she had sent me a looong list of a local's recommendations on what to do.
Aalborg was beautiful. In short, it is my new favorite city of Denmark! Copenhagen has (almost) nothing on Aalborg. ;) So charming, and so beautiful. The city centre is really old, but the buildings are well preserved, and makes the city really special. The city has a long history, and the fact that this was for long the second biggest city in Denmark, and an important city to the King, is quite fascinating.

My favorite part was walking along the "fjord" on the first evening (I have to put "" around fjord here because the Norwegian perception of the word fjord is not what I saw in Limfjorden in Aalborg. Sorry, Denmark.) The sun had just set, and the pink and purple sky over the quiet city was just amazing to look at. The harbor has a lot of new and modern buildings, like the Utzon center and Musikkens Hus, which both bring some modern feeling in to the old city. Just lovely!
The next day, we spent walking through the city, doing some shopping, enjoying the sun, eating and drinking in all the right cafés and restaurants, thanks to Nanna, and at last, seing Captain Marvel in the cinema.

Day 4, Århus: 
Our last day, we drove early from Aalborg, so we arrived in Århus right on time for AROS to open. AROS is a museum of modern art, that I really only wanted to visit because of its famous rainbow on top. The museum itself is not very pretty from the outside, but the rainbow on the roof does all the work to make the building interesting and worth a look.
After walking around in AROS for a while, and among others seing an installation by the Japanese LABPlanets (which we also saw in Tokyo), we went to the next museum, and highlight of the day: Den Gamle By (The Old Town). Den Gamle By is absolutely worth a visit, and we learned so much about Danish history (which is in many ways also Norwegian history). The houses and the clothes and the atmosphere were all so authentic, and really gave us a great experience the whole day through.

The installation "Tomorrow is the question" by LABPlanets

Beautiful installation in AROS. 

Great shot of the 18th century houses in Den Gamle By. 

Thank you so much to everyone who sent us recommendations to this trip, and thank you Denmark, for being so damn likable!!
All pictures are of course taken by the world's best Knut!

Friday, February 15, 2019

Tokyo Part 1. What I found most fascinating about the Japanese culture.

Ever since I was little, the far east has been a big mystery to me. I have not really been interested in it, and it has just been something far away, that I never thought I would really discover. Japan was just one of those countries, that from the outside looks like a big industry country, which is super technological, and has very delicious food. At least, those were my super ignorant thoughts.
Until the autumn of 2017, when Knut started working in Sticks'n'sushi, the leading Sushi restaurant in Copenhagen, I had no idea about how rich the Japanese culture is. Sticks'n'sushi blends the Danish and Japanese culture very elegantly, and serves the best sushi that I know of (in the west, of course), but it also teaches you a lot about the Japanese culture. When you enter, they all scream "Irasshaimase!", meaning "Welcome", and you get a "Oshibori" (hot towel to clean your hands) once you get seated. They have a great selection of sushi and other Japanese foods, for example miso soup, and of course a lot of Sake. Therefore, after Knut started working there, I have gotten more and more interested in the Japanese culture.

Judging by my travel journal, that I wrote during the flight to Tokyo, about my expectations for this trip, I had absolutely no idea what I was about to see. And of course a week in a whole new country and culture is not nearly enough to learn it all (can an "outsider" even learn everything about a culture that is not one's own?), but I am back in Copenhagen with a lot of impressions, and inspiration. The Japanese culture really inspired me, and here are some of the observations from the Japanese culture that fascinates me the most:

- The Japanese are always well dressed. On our last evening, Knut and I discussed what was our favourite part about our journey. He of course answered the food, but I actually had to think about it for a while. And my final conclusion was actually that my favourite part was the people-watching, and how incredibly inspiring it was for me to see how well-dressed the Japanese were. People had very nice clothes, made from quality fabrics, hardly anyone wore sneakers, and everyone had their hair and makeup very neatly.
Somewhere near Shibuya station. But look at the women in the background,
with their beautiful coats! I look so touristy and dumb with my winter jacket and beanie. 
Women wearing the traditional Kimono. In the Asakusa area, a lot of people
were wearing traditional costumes, and it was so beautiful to look at.

- The Japanese never talk loudly in public. As a pretty loud speaking woman, I really had to adjust to this one. Everywhere we went; restaurants, cafés, stores, the metro, even walking in the streets, it was always really quiet, and after a day or two, we discovered why: the people don't talk to each other in public! And for a very technical reason, that more and more cars are hybrids or electric, the traffic is also very quiet, so at one point when we were out walking the only sound we could actually hear (this was in a very crowded street), were the heels clicking on the pavement.

- All the menus in restaurants have pictures on them. This one was pretty much a life-saver for us. We had expected people to be speaking English, but actually, very few people could communicate in a reasonable level of English. So when ordering food, we ended up just pointing at whatever looked good on the menu, and hoping that it tasted as good as it looked. But actually, we had nothing to worry about, because everything tasted delicious.

- The food. Oh, the food. 
Knut buying wagyu and squid at Tsukiji fish market
Knut having takoyaki (something with squid) at the famous Cat Street in Shibuya

- Arigato Gozaimasu! (Meaning thank you very much) The Japanese were incredibly polite and helpful to us, and wherever we went, people were always there to help, even though we could not understand each other (google translate is your friend). Even though they had helped us, they always ended up saying Arigato Gozaimasu while bowing, and after just a couple of days, we did the same.

- People at work, everywhere. During our week in Tokyo, we had to google the unemployment rate of Japan, because people were at work everywhere. Along the streets, people in uniforms were showing the way, as construction workers were fixing the roads. In the museums, there were (at least) twice as many museum guides as museum guests, and in the train stations, a lot of people were at work, even though we were not really sure what their job was. And our assumption was right. The unemployment rate of Japan is 2,4%, amongst the lowest in the world! And it really impressed me, how well-organized the society is when everyone is at work, and keeping the streets clean and the trains running.

- Respectful to their cultural heritage, while also leading within technology. How do I even explain this one... Tokyo had a lot of parks, and in a lot of these parks, there were old temples, and a lot of old history to be reminded of. Outside of these parks, the Japanese busy society was living its busy, technological life, but inside the park, there was enough space for nature and old history to keep on living their lives. This beautiful contrast inspired me so much. On our second day in Tokyo, we went to one of the many parks, and visited a little tea house. Before we went in, we had to take off our shoes, and we were seated on mats on the floor. Even though we could hear some of the traffic of the roads outside of the park, the atmosphere and the quietness inside the teahouse was an amazing experience. And I have to admit, after finishing my 7th year at school, I have not really been sitting on the floor that much, and my body kind of hurt after just a short time. But it was also very nice to experience how much you are in contact with your body while sitting on the floor, compared to sitting on a chair.
Matcha and little cakes/cookies in a little tea house

In front of the Meiji Temple - not very old, but in accordance with old traditions (the original
Meiji-temple was built in the 1920's, but got destroyed during WW2, and this one was built in the 1950's), 
This picture explains some of my point here: while in the middle of a beautiful park, with a tea
house and a little lake, you also see the huge skyscrapers and industry of Tokyo.
This is in my opinion a perfect merge of old and new, tradition and technology.
Knut taking pictures of the many flashing signs in Shinjuku. Some of the streets could be
overwhelming, with blinking signs, and commercial songs played on the speakers out in the streets.
- Kids are incredibly quiet and polite. As I mentioned, the metro, the streets, and also the restaurants of Tokyo were very quiet, since the people did not talk, or talked very softly, to each other. This also counts for the children. In the weekdays, we saw Japanese kids in the cutest little school uniforms everywhere, sometimes in groups, especially during lunch-time and after school-time, and they never made any noise! Just politely lined up, talking quietly to each other, or of course, looking at their phones.

- "Where is the chocolate?!" Everyone who knows me, knows how much I love candy, and especially chocolate. Therefore, it was actually a huge disappointment to go to the candy shops in Japan, which had a very narrow selection of chocolate. And the weirdest thing, was that almost all Japanese candy contained red beans! I would have never thought that anyone would make candy of red beans, but they do, and they enjoy it. I was sceptic, and tasted a few different candies, but I have to say I really missed chocolate over there. But my absolute favorite candy was Mochi! Colorful, sweet, and very "kawaii" (meaning "cute"). I have not seen Mochi anywhere in Scandinavia yet, but hope it will make its way here some time. 
Buying some sweets in the Yoyogi park. They are made of rice,
and served grilled and dipped in a sweet sauce

These are some of my observations on Japanese culture. I am amazed by their culture, and how neat everything is, and ever since arriving home, I have considered changing my whole wardrobe to only Uniqlo-clothes. One day...

Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Stockholm!

In the first weekend of December, Knut and I went to visit our friends Hanne and Aigars in Stockholm. Knut had been there before, but for me, it was my first visit to Stockholm. I was really excited to explore the city, but of course also to see my friends.

Hanne and Aigars live on the little island Lilla Essingen, which was a really cute place, with some small cafés and stores,  and a lot of apartment buildings. Unfortunately, we did not explore the island, as much as we could have done, other than just walking to the grocery store and to the bus, but there was a lovely walking route along the water, where you see a lot of the Stockholm archipelago. If I come back in the summer, that is on my to do list!

On friday, we took the bus to Hötorget, in the city centre, to do some shopping. One of my favourite swedish stores that we don't have in Copenhagen is Lagerhaus, and we immediately went to that one. We also went to Knut and my favourite store, the Japanese clothing brand Uniqlo, and to some other stores, before we went back to the apartment and made som tacos in our PJ's.

Such a cute group of friends
On saturday, we went walking in the city, from Hötorget, over Sergels Torg, and over to Gamla Stan, the old town of Stockholm. Even though we tried to hurry out in the morning, it was almost getting dark as we got to Gamla Stan (also due to the heavy clouds and rainy weather). It was such a cosy walk through the city, and in Gamla Stan we saw some really cute little stores, and we stopped in the café Under Kastanjen to Fika.


Walking through the narrow streets of Gamla Stan


Fika at Under Kastanjen
On our way back to the apartment, we walked on the east side of Gamla Stan, where the royal castle is, and had a beautiful view of the water, and all the old buildings on the other side:

That evening, we went to Södermalm for some drinks, and ended up at a really cozy Greek restaurant, and later, at a really carried out Gaming-bar, with Nintendo on little TV-screens, gaming-themed drinks, and also boardgames.

On sunday, we went to the Vasa-museum on Skansen, which in my opinion was the absolute highlight of the trip. The Vasa ship was built in the 17th century, to be the biggest and best warship in Europe, but on its first day on the water, it sank right outside of Stockholm, and of course was a huge disaster. The museum not only tells the story about the ship itself, but also about the swedish society in the 17th century, and of the people involved in the planning and building of the ship. And last but not least, the exhibition had its own part about the women in this time, which I found really interesting and that taught me a lot.

Knut, Aigars and Hanne on the bridge in front of Skansen.

Group selfie in front of Vasa

I am a big fan of everything that has to do with maritime history.
After the museum, we went to Fika, and then we had to catch our flight home. Stockholm made a very good first impression on me, with its rich history, very cute pastel houses, and delicious bakery. And as always, it was really nice to be together with Hanne and Aigars!